In Re Estate of Weidman

228 N.W. 571, 209 Iowa 603
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 14, 1930
DocketNo. 39838.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 228 N.W. 571 (In Re Estate of Weidman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Weidman, 228 N.W. 571, 209 Iowa 603 (iowa 1930).

Opinion

*604 Faville, J.

—The decedent, Thomas Weidman, died testate in 1921, leaving surviving him the applicant, his widow, and a large family of children, who are appellees herein. Appellant and Weidman were married in 1911. Prior to said marriage, an antenuptial contract was entered into between them, which provided that, at the death of Weidman, the appellant should receive the sum of $16 per month as long as she lived. The value of the personal estate of Weid-man was about $40,000. The day following the funeral of Weid-man, the appellant was interviewed by a lawyer in regard to the administration of the estate, and appellant consented that one Peterson should be appointed administrator, and signed a petition for his appointment. The evidence of the appellant tends to show that thereafter, on various occasions, appellant made complaint to the administrator and the said attorney that she desired more money to live on, and was advised by the attorney that she was bound by the terms of the antenuptial contract, and could not secure a widow’s allowance from the estate. It appears that the appellant did not secure any other legal advice until about June of 1923. About a year after the death of Weid-man, to wit, on August 29, 1922, the appellant signed a waiver of notice of the filing of final report of the administrator. Said notice was in the usual form, stating that the final report was then on file, and that it would come on for hearing on the 24th day of October, 1922. The final report referred to recited that all just claims, debts, and charges against said estate had been fully paid and satisfied. On the 30th day of October, 1922, the final report came on for hearing, and the court made the following order:

“That the said estate be closed for all purposes except the collection of the threé notes which are the property of the estate and the interest thereon, the payment of the monthly allowance to Ellen Weidman, and the final distribution according to the shares set forth in the supplement to the final report filed 29 Sept., 1922; and it is further ordered that Wm. Peterson be discharged as administrator, but that he be continued as trustee for the purposes above mentioned.”

In 1923, the appellant instituted an action for the purpose *605 of recovering her distributive share in the estate of said decedent. She was defeated in this action, and appealed to this court, where the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. Weidman v. Money, 205 Iowa 1062. Shortly after the decision of said cause in this court, to wit, in the spring of 1928, the appellant instituted the instant proceeding for widow’s allowance. The record shows that, from the time of the death of the decedent until the time said application was submitted, there was no substantial change in the value or status of the personal estate of said decedent. The trial court found that, had the applicant filed her application prior to the order approving said final report, she would have been legally entitled to an allowance in the sum of $150 per month for support as widow of the decedent, following the year of his death. The court held that the application for allowance was too late, and that the order approving the final report on October 30, 1922, was a full and complete adjudication of the rights of the widow, and that the same could not be set aside, in the absence of fraud or mistake, and that neither fraud nor mistake had been established.

I. Appellant contends that, under the order of the court of October 30, 1922, the estate was not closed, because something further was required to be done, in the collection of notes, the payment of the monthly allowance to appellant, and final distribution. The order of the court in terms states that said estate was closed for all purposes except the three matters just referred to, and directed that the administrator be discharged, and that he be continued as trustee for the purposes above mentioned. We had occasion to consider this order in the case of Weidman v. Money, 205 Iowa 1062, and therein we said:

“Due personal service of such final report and of the administrator’s application for a discharge was accepted by all the beneficiaries of the estate, including the plaintiff herein. On October 30, 1922, such final report was approved, and the administrator was discharged. A trustee was appointed, to hold sufficient of the funds of the estate to provide for the annuity to the plaintiff. The trustee appointed was Peterson, the former administrator. He has functioned as a trustee since the date of his appointment, and has in his hands abundant funds for the protection of the annuity obligation to the plaintiff. * * * It is *606 well settled in this state that a final order in probate, entered on dne notice to the beneficiaries, is a final adjudication. We so held in Ryan v. Hutchinson, 161 Iowa 575, and in Aschan v. McDermott, 164 Iowa 750. See, also, Tucker v. Stewart, 121 Iowa 714, 716; Graves v. Graves, 132 Iowa 199; Bradbury v. Wells, 138 Iowa 673.”

The statute contemplates a definite and certain time when estates in probate shall be finally closed. The order in the instant case was a final closing of said estate, and it was not open and pending when appellant’s application was filed.

II. It is contended that appellant’s application must, in any event, be inaugurated by an action in equity, and not by proceedings in probate.

Section 12049, Code, 1927, is as follows:

“Mistakes in settlements may be corrected in the probate court at any time before his final settlement and discharge, and after that time by equitable proceedings, on showing such grounds as will justify the interference of the court.”

Said section clearly contemplates an action after final settlement and discharge by equitable proceedings. The instant application was entitled as in the original probate proceedings. No question as to the forum was raised in the lower court. It cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. In re Estate of Heaver, 168 Iowa 563, 567, and cases cited therein. It follows that we may consider the case upon its merits, even though it was not brought in equity, as the statute contemplates.

In In re Estate of Heaver, 168 Iowa 563, we said:

“All proceedings, whether probate, equity, or law, are before the same court. Tucker v. Stewart, 121 Iowa 714; Goodnow v. Wells, 67 Iowa 654. Forms of action only differ, and these are not controlling. They are adopted for purposes of efficiency in, and not as a clog to, the administration of justice. The remedy to which either party is entitled may be awarded in utter disregard of the place on the calendar. The cause may be docketed, whether with the actions at law, suits in equity, or with the estates in probate, unless objection is raised in the manner pre *607 scribed by statute. Secs. 3432, 3433, 3434, Code. In tbe absence of any motion to transfer to the proper place, the parties are presumed to assent to the trial of the cause where instituted, and cannot thereafter be heard to complain on this ground. Smith v. Haas,

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228 N.W. 571, 209 Iowa 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-weidman-iowa-1930.